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Managing research data and Horizon 2020
Sarah Jones
Digital Curation Centre, Glasgow
Twitter: @sjDCC
Consorcio Madroño conference on Data Management Plans and Horizon 2020, ETSI Industriales, Madrid, 25th February 2015
Funded by:
Benefits and drivers
WHY MANAGE RESEARCH DATA?
What is Research Data Management?
The active management of data throughout the lifecycle
Create
Document
Use
Store
Share
Preserve
• Data Management Planning
• Creating data
• Documenting data
• Accessing / using data
• Storage and backup
• Selecting what to keep
• Sharing data
• Data licensing and citation
• Preserving data
• …
Why manage research data?
Direct benefits for you
• To make your research easier!
• Stop yourself drowning in irrelevant stuff
• Have data organised so you know which versions are most up-to-date
• Make sure you can understand and reuse your data again later
Research integrity
• To avoid accusations of fraud or bad science
• Evidence findings and enable validation of research methods
• Codes of practice on good research conduct
• Many research funders worldwide now require Data Management and Sharing Plans
Potential to share
• So others can reuse and build on your data
• To gain credit – several studies have shown higher citation rates when data are shared
• For greater visibility, impact and new research collaborations
• Promote innovation and allow research in your field to advance faster
It’s part of good research practice
Science as an open enterprise
https://royalsociety.org/policy/projects/science-public-enterprise/Report
“Much of the remarkable growth of scientific understanding in recent centuries is due to open practices; open communication and deliberation
sit at the heart of scientific practice.”
The Royal Society report calls for ‘intelligent openness’ whereby data are accessible, intelligible, assessable and usable.
More scientific breakthroughs
www.nytimes.com/2010/08/13/health/research/13alzheimer.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
“It was unbelievable. Its not science the way most of us have practiced in our careers. But we all realised that
we would never get biomarkers unless all of us parked our egos and
intellectual property noses outside the door and agreed that all of our data
would be public immediately.”Dr John Trojanowski, University of Pennsylvania
Increased use and economic benefit
UP TO 2008
Sold through the US Geological Survey for US$600 per scene
Sales of 19,000 scenes per year
Annual revenue of $11.4 million
SINCE 2009
Freely available over the internet
Google Earth now uses the images
Transmission of 2,100,000 scenes per year.
Estimated to have created value for the environmental management industry of $935 million, with direct benefit of more than $100 million per year to the US economy
Has stimulated the development of applications from a large number of companies worldwide
The case of NASA Landsat satellite imagery of the Earth’s surface:
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=83394&src=ve
But there are also opportunity costs
By Emilio Brunahttp://brunalab.org/blog/2014/09/04/the-opportunity-cost-of-my-openscience-was-35-hours-690
For his most recent paper:
1. Double checking the main dataset and reformatting to submit to Dryad: 5 hours
2. Creating complementary file and preparing metadata: 3 hours
3. Submission of these two files and the metadata to Dryad: 45 minutes
4. Preparing a map of the locations: 1 hour
5. Submission of map to Figshare: 15 minutes
6. Cleaning up and documenting the code, uploading it to GitHub: 25 hours
7. Cost of archiving in Dryad: US$90
8. Page Charges: $600
So what needs to change?
Conclusions from Emilio Bruna:
• Develop a better system of incentives from the
community for archiving data and code
• Teach our students how to do this NOW - it’s much easier
if you develop good habits early
• Minimise the actual and opportunity costs
We need to stop telling people “You should” and get
better at telling people “Here’s how”
10 things to think about
HOW TO MANAGE DATA?
Image CC-BY-NC-SA by Leo Reynolds www.flickr.com/photos/lwr/13442910354
1. What file formats are most appropriate?
• Do you have a choice or do the instruments you use only export in certain formats?
• What is common in your field? Try to use something that is accepted and widespread.
• Does your data centre recommend formats? If so it’s best to use these.
If you want your data to be re-used and sustainable in the long-term, you typically want to opt for open, non-proprietary formats.
Type Recommended Avoid for data sharing
Tabular data CSV, TSV, SPSS portable Excel
Text Plain text, HTML, RTFPDF/A only if layout matters
Word
Media Container: MP4, OggCodec: Theora, Dirac, FLAC
QuicktimeH264
Images TIFF, JPEG2000, PNG GIF, JPG
Structured data XML, RDF RDBMS
Further examples: http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/create-manage/format/formats-table
2. How will you name your files?
• Keep file and folder names short, but meaningful
• Agree a method for versioning
• Include dates in a set format e.g. YYYYMMDD
• Avoid using non-alphanumeric characters in file names
• Use hyphens or underscores not spaces e.g. day-sheet, day_sheet
• Order the elements in the most appropriate way to retrieve the record
www.jiscdigitalmedia.ac.uk/guide/choosing-a-file-name
Example from ARM Climate Research Facility www.arm.gov/data/docs/plan
3. Can others understand the data?
Think about what is needed in order to find, evaluate, understand, and reuse the data.
• Have you documented what you did and how?
• Did you develop code to run analyses? If so, this should be kept and shared too.
• Is it clear what each bit of your dataset means? Make sure the units are labelled and abbreviations explained.
• Record metadata so others can find your work e.g. title, date, creator(s), subject, format, rights…,
4. What metadata standards will you use?
Use relevant standards for interoperability
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/metadata-standards
5. Where will you store the data?
• Your own device (laptop, flash drive, server etc.)
– And if you lose it? Or it breaks?
• Departmental drives or university servers
• “Cloud” storage
– Do they care as much about your data as you do?
The decision will be based on how sensitive your data are, how robust you need the storage to be, and who needs access to the data and when
6. Who will do the backup?
Use managed services where possible (e.g. University filestores rather than local or external hard drives), so backup is done automatically
3… 2… 1… backup!
at least 3 copies of a fileon at least 2 different mediawith at least 1 offsite
Ask central IT team for advice
7. Can you publish / share your data?
• Who owns the data?
• Have you got consent for sharing?
• Do any licences you’ve signed permit sharing?
• Is the data in suitable formats?
• Is there enough documentation?
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/license-research-data
8. How will you license your data?
• Can your data be made available openly? e.g. CC0 or CC-BY
• Do you need to place certain restrictions on who can use the data or how?
This DCC how-to guide outlines pros and cons of each approach and gives practical advice on how to implement your licence.
9. Which data need to be kept?
Five steps to follow
① Could this data be re-used
② Must it be kept as evidence or for legal reasons
③ Should it be kept for its potential value
④ Consider costs – do benefits outweigh cost?
⑤ Evaluate criteria to decide what to keep
5 steps to decide what data to keep
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/five-steps-decide-what-data-keep
10. Who will share & preserve the data?
http://databib.org
http://service.re3data.org/search
Zenodo
• Joint effort by OpenAIRE-CERN
• Multidisciplinary repository
• Multiple data types– Publications– Long tail of research data
• Citable data (DOI)
• Links funding, publications, data & software
www.zenodo.org
• Does your publisher or funder suggest a repository?
• Are there data centres or community databases for your discipline?
• Does your university offer support for long-term preservation?
Managing and sharing data: a best practice guide
http://data-archive.ac.uk/media/2894/managingsharing.pdf
Guidance and support to meet the EC requirements
HORIZON 2020 OPEN DATA PILOT
Image CC-BY-NC-SA by Tom Magllery www.flickr.com/photos/lwr/13442910354
Why open access and open data?
“The European Commission’s vision is that information already paid for by the
public purse should not be paid for again each time it is accessed or used, and that
it should benefit European companies and citizens to the full.”
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-pilot-guide_en.pdf
What is open data?
make your stuff available on the Web (whatever format) under an open licence
make it available as structured data (e.g. Excel instead of a scan of a table)
use non-proprietary formats (e.g. CSV instead of Excel)
use URIs to denote things, so that people can point at your stuff
link your data to other data to provide context
Tim Berners-Lee’s proposal for five star open data - http://5stardata.info
“Open data and content can be freely used, modified and shared by anyone for any purpose”
http://opendefinition.org
How to make data open?
1. Choose your dataset(s)What can you may open? You may need to revisit this step if
you encounter problems later.
2. Apply an open licenseDetermine what IP exists. Apply a suitable licence e.g. CC-BY
3. Make the data availableProvide the data in a suitable format. Use repositories.
4. Make it discoverablePost on the web, register in catalogues…
https://okfn.org
Support on Data Management Plans
What to cover in DMPs:
1. Description of data to be collected / created
2. Standards and methodologies for data collection & management
3. Any issues or restrictions due to ethics and Intellectual Property
4. Plans for data sharing and access
5. Strategy for long-term preservation
Example DMPs, guidance, tools and support at:
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/data-management-plans
OpenAIRE
http://vimeo.com/108790101
Open Access Infrastructure for research in Europe
• aggregates data on OA publications
• mines & enriches it content by linking thing together
• provides services & APIs e.g.
to generate publication lists
www.openaire.eu
EUDAT
Data Infrastructure project offering various services:
• B2DROP: sync & exchange data
• B2SHARE: store & share
• B2STAGE: get data to computation
• B2SAFE: replicate data safely
• B2FIND: find data
They also offer a licensing wizard: http://ufal.github.io/lindat-license-selector
www.eudat.eu
Discipline-specific infrastructure
FOSTER open science
• Open access and open data training across Europe
• Portal with access to reusable learning objects
• e-learning courses forthcoming
• Check out the training programme www.fosteropenscience.eu/events
Sharing European Research Outcomes: Raising Awareness on Open Access, Open Research Data and Open ScienceMay 13 (Madrid) – 14 (Valencia) – 28 (Gijón)
Gracias por su atención
DCC guidance, tools & case studies:
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources
Follow us on twitter:
@digitalcuration and #ukdcc